The Cause and Signs of a Lost Self: Emptiness, Depression and Codependency

Carl Jung thought emptiness was a psychological phenomenon, born of the structural division within the self―the powerlessness of our ego to control our mind [12]. Whereas existential emptiness is concerned with our relationship to life, psychological emptiness reflects a troubled relationship with ourselves. Existential emptiness is considered to be more intellectual and spiritual than psychological emptiness [13,14].
The two types may be difficult to distinguish. However, only psychological emptiness is significantly correlated with depression [14] and is deeply related to shame. Depression includes a variety of symptoms, including sadness and crying, anxiety or restlessness, shame and guilt, apathy, fatigue, change in appetite or sleep habits, poor concentration, suicidal thoughts, and feeling empty.
Psychological emptiness may be felt as restlessness, a void, or a hunger that can drive addictive behavior. Feelings of emptiness, deadness, nothingness, meaninglessness, or isolation can color a constant undertone of depression. Alternatively, they may be felt periodically, either vaguely or profoundly. In contrast to existential emptiness, which needs no trigger, these feelings are usually elicited by acute shame or loss. In severe cases, meaninglessness can prevail over any sense of responsibility, sending us into the abyss. Significant childhood trauma can leave a “deep inner hell that often is unspeakable and unnamable” [15].
Many other psychoanalysts, including Otto Kernberg, Heinz Kohut, Donald Winnicott, and Wilfred Bion also believed emptiness was a psychological experience. Bion introduced the symbol “O” to represent emptiness or nothingness, which forms the matrix of our sense of self — the divine ground of being, analogous to sunyata that is sought by meditators and avoided by patients [16]. He posited that for an infant, the absence of a mother’s breast creates a space of “no-thing” and “no breast,” a potentially terrifying experience of loss and confusion [17].
Psychoanalyst Karen Horney considered emptiness to be the result of a neurotic process emanating from self-alienation that starts in childhood [18]. Winnicott added that when a mother doesn’t sufficiently adapt to her infant’s needs and gestures, the infant instead adapts to her, thus constructing a false self. Inadequate mirroring can lead to a “depleted self,” which Kohut referred to as an “empty depression” [19]. The resulting disconnection to the real self creates a feeling of emptiness, of “not really living” or “sleepwalking through life” [20].
Deficient maternal attunement and dysfunctional parenting not only lead to psychological emptiness, but also to codependency — “a disease of the lost self” [21]. Psychological emptiness is common among codependents, which includes addicts and many individuals with mental disorders. Lack of a developed core self is a major issue for codependents. They have difficulty accessing their innate self because their feelings, thinking, and behavior revolve around other people or an addiction. They live externally through the lives of others; whose opinions measure their own worth. This self-alienation derives from lack of awareness and connection to an internal life — their real self. Horney described this as a “paucity of inner experiences, impairing feelings, willing, thinking, wishing, believing” [22].
To the existentialists, a loss of self generates our deepest despair, referred to by Kierkegaard as “sickness unto death,” but it’s a loss that does not clamor or scream [18]. Prolonged self-alienation can be sensed as a vacuum, meaninglessness, nothingness, or apathy. One patient experienced her despair as a “sense of broken reality” caused by the juxtaposition of her hollow, empty persona and the “devouring black hole” of her internal world [15].
The emptiness underlying codependency and addiction is often associated with dysthymia or chronic depression. More severe is abandonment depression, coined by psychiatrist James Masterson, which can result from a childhood devoid of nurturing and empathy and lead to symptoms of depression, emptiness, panic, guilt, rage, and helplessness [23]. The mother may be mentally ill, an addict, and/or codependent herself. Without a soothing and responsive maternal presence, an infant can be terrified by uncomfortable feelings of helplessness, vulnerability, and complete dependency upon adults for survival.
Lack of maternal responsiveness in infancy can contribute to persistent negative affect. When a mother is absent or unresponsive, her baby’s experience of “no-thing” is filled with negative sensory and affective impressions, which if not tolerated, the “no-thingness” can devolve into the disintegrative nothingness of a “black-hole” [24,26].
Ability to bear panic and frustration depend solely upon a baby’s knowledge that his or her mother will return. This allows an infant to think, reflect, and trust her. Ideally, a baby gradually is able to tolerate a mother’s absence, conjure a mental image of her, and regulate internal states and feelings [24].
Developing this capacity to tolerate separations from our mother affects the way we experience being alone or significant losses as an adult. For many people, including codependents, early deficits are often exacerbated by additional trauma, abuse, and physical or emotional abandonment later in childhood and in adult relationships. A poem I penned in early adolescence distilled my alienation and loneliness. It lamented the human condition of wandering the “distances that abandon our hearts to loneliness,” like “two stars, years apart.”
Because codependents depend on external objects for self-cohesion, they often experience depression and emptiness when they stop their addiction, or when a close relationship, however brief, ends. They may say, “He was part of me;” “She was my reason for living;” “Marijuana made me feel normal;” or “Cigarettes were my best friend.” To the extent the other person or drug served self-object functions, the loss can feel as if part of the self is lost, like the world has died, representing a symbolic death of their mother and of their self.
Emptiness and depression are also the consequence of real deficits when we’re unable to be effective agents in our lives. We miss out on joy, contentment, and an ability to manifest our desires. Without access to the energy of our real self, our belief that we can’t direct our lives is confirmed, increasing our hopelessness and depression. We feel things will never change and that no one cares, while longing to be cared for.
This is the third installment of several that examine perspectives on emptiness. Next up is emptiness and shame. Check footnote references and read the entire original article.
© 2019 Darlene Lancer





